- A
macaroni (formerly
spelled maccaroni) was a
pejorative term used to
describe a
fashionable fellow of 18th-century Britain. Stereotypically, men in the...
-
Italian cook
active in Rome; this
recipe for "Roman macaroni" (Italian:
maccaroni romaneschi)
calls for
cooking pasta in
broth or
water and
adding butter...
- Cibber's play The
Careless Husband (1704) had a
famous Steinkirk Scene. The
maccaronis reintroduced the
flowing cravat in the 1770s, and the
manner of a man's...
- "the
maccaroni,
previously well-drained, may then be
tossed gently in it, or
after it is dished, the
cheese may be
poured equally over the
maccaroni" before...
- cow (plur. malloreddus)
Gnocchetti sardi, caidos,
macarones cravaos,
maccaronis de
orgiu Sardinia Mandala Designed by
Philippe Starck in 1987 for French...
- intitulé
Libro de arte coquinaria: on y
trouve des "
maccaroni romaneschi,
maccaroni in
altro modo,
maccaroni siciliani e
vermicelli " (macaronis à la romaine...
-
Maccaronis were 18th-century dandies. This
example 1792 is from
Sutton House...
- in
favour of what was
known as the '
Maccaroni'
tradition in
which a
British shilling,
referred to as a '
Maccaroni', was
treated as one
quarter of a dollar...
-
England now? – A sink of
Indian wealth,
filled by
nabobs and
emptied by
Maccaronis! A
senate sold and despised! A
country overrun by horse-races! A gaming...
-
describes a more
refined and
elegant cuisine. His book
contains a
recipe for
maccaroni siciliani, made by
wrapping dough around a thin iron rod to dry in the...